Hollywood Won 2012?

The television industry loves to claim that all of the sex, violence,
and foul-mouthed language they display has zero harmful effects on
children. On the other hand, they would never dream of telling their
advertisers that their paid messages on TV have no effect. So does the
entertainment industry have an impact, or doesn't it?

The answer is that Tinseltown certainly has an effect, and when that
effect is felt in the political arena, the hell with pretending they
don't. They openly celebrate.

After the 2012 election, the surprising (if narrow) victories for
liberals drew a thumbs-up commentary from former Washington Post
reporter Sharon Waxman at The Wrap website. She credited Hollywood.

“Hollywood should be euphoric today. The entertainment industry woke up
to election results that reflect a country a lot more like the
fictional place they’ve been depicting on screens large and small for
decades: more ethnically diverse, more gay-friendly, with powerful women
and where it’s just fine to light up a spliff.”

The black president won re-election, alongside the first openly lesbian
U.S. Senator. Voters approved gay-marriage referendums in four states
and marijuana legalization measures in two states. Waxman added exit
poll numbers for minorities: Latinos voted for Obama by 75 to 23, and
Asians by 73 to 26. “The affirmation of liberal values in this election
is remarkable,” she claimed.

Waxman conceded that almost half the country voted for Mitt Romney. She
guessed “the rejection of the Republican Party agenda was more of a
factor than an embrace of left-wing values.”

Where to start? The left certainly can -- and should -- take the credit
for the civil rights crusade. But that was a half century ago. Why not
give Abe Lincoln -- yup, Republicans, the credit?

Forty-four states don't have gay-marriage legislation. Since 1998, in
28 states where it's been proposed, every single ballot initiative to
uphold traditional marriage has passed, including blue states like
Hawaii and California, although the size of the majorities faded over
time.

How
did Tolerant Tinseltown handle it? The passage of California’s
Proposition 8 in 2008, fervently expected to fail in the Year of Obama,
led to a vicious round of anti-Mormon sentiment and blacklisting for
opposing “history,” and at least two Mormons were forced into
resignations from entertainment jobs for making thousand-dollar
donations to the Prop 8 campaign.

Forward to 2012, and the Mormon Church didn’t want to get involved in
state referendums in Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington state
because it might interfere with electing the first Mormon President. The
Catholic Church and evangelical pro-family activists in these states
failed to mobilize enough opposition.

Still, the media declared the victory emanated from television sets
across America in HD -- for Highly Democratic -- and there's truth here.

The Hollywood Reporter conducted a poll with the research firm Penn
Schoen Berland on October 29 and announced that shows with gay
characters, like ABC’s “Modern Family,” Fox’s “Glee,” and NBC’s “The New
Normal” are helping drive voters to “historically unprecedented support
of gay marriage.” (Did you hear that, you conservatives who regularly
ignore Hollywood because who cares?)

Asked about how the shows influenced them, 27 percent said
gay-promotional TV shows made them more pro-gay marriage, and six
percent more opposed. Obama voters watched and 30 percent grew more
supportive, to two percent less supportive. Surprisingly, the shows were
also winning over Romney voters: 13 percent became more
pro-gay-marriage, while 12 percent were more opposed. (Did you hear
that, pro-family conservatives?)

Pollster Mark Penn insisted young people are the most influenced.
“Almost twice as many voters under 35 say these shows made them more in
favor of gay marriage compared with voters over 35 -- 38 percent versus
just 20 percent. Impressionable young people are more open to changing
their views and behavior, based on what they’re watching."

But the networks want to deny impressionable young people are swayed by
the sensationalism in their programs. The evidence to the contrary is
overwhelming.

Liberals are twice as likely to watch these shows, but over the past
decade, the Hollywood Reporter poll found about three times as many
voters have become more for gay marriage as against -- 31 percent pro,
10 percent anti.

Gay activists and their media allies now routinely cite “Glee” and
“Modern Family” as proof of the historical inevitability of social
liberalism. After the election, former Republican pollster Matthew Dowd
cracked the Republicans were a “‘Mad Men’ party in a ‘Modern Family’
world.” In other words, they’re fifty years behind the times.

These same liberals continue to lament democracy is being destroyed by
corporate money sloshing all over the television during the ad breaks,
presumably because of their impact in a medium where they claim the
entertainment sponsored doesn't have an impact on impressionable folks
-- except when the impact furthers the destruction of social mores they
like to champion publicly. Did you follow that?

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